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Logistics Systems Engineering System Cost Analysis

SMU SYS 7340. NTU SY-521-N. Logistics Systems Engineering System Cost Analysis. Dr. Jerrell T. Stracener, SAE Fellow. System Cost Analysis. Definitions Cardinal Principles Scope of Life Cycle Cost (LCC) LCC Model Structure & Analysis Flow LCC Applications LCC Phases LCC Analysis

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Logistics Systems Engineering System Cost Analysis

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  1. SMU SYS 7340 NTU SY-521-N Logistics Systems Engineering System Cost Analysis Dr. Jerrell T. Stracener, SAE Fellow

  2. System Cost Analysis • Definitions • Cardinal Principles • Scope of Life Cycle Cost (LCC) • LCC Model Structure & Analysis Flow • LCC Applications • LCC Phases • LCC Analysis • LCC Tracking • Summary

  3. Definitions • LCC: The total cost to the customer of acquisition and ownership of a system over its full life. It includes the cost of development, production, operation, support and where applicable, disposal. • Cost Effectiveness: Consideration of performance, mission reliability, operational readiness (availability), etc., along with LCC to evaluate competing design or support approaches.

  4. Definitions • Life Cycle Costing: An analytical study of a system’s live cycle cost- not an exact science. • Design to Cost (DTC): Cost is a design parameter receiving consideration along with performance, schedule, etc. DTC is a management tool to integrate cost into the design process.

  5. Cardinal Principles • Not an exact science - numerous estimations • No right or wrong - reasonable or unreasonable • No such thing as an LCC expert - too broad and deep • Not a good budgeting tool - effective as comparison/trade-off tool

  6. Cardinal Principles • Requires a project team approach - need specialized expertise • Should be integral part of the design and support processes - DTLCC

  7. Scope of LCC • LCC analysis can be applied on commercial as well as government programs • Existing government programs require LCC analysis - increasing frequency is expected • LCC analysis is applicable across all phases of a program - development, production and use

  8. Scope of LCC • LCC analysis is applicable to software as well as hardware

  9. Typical LCC Model Structure ACQUISITION COST D & D COST NONRECURRING INVESTMENT COST Acquisition Cost Insert Model

  10. LCC Analysis Flow • Doctrines • Procurement • Operational • Maint./Support System Characteristics Input Data Estimates Cost Model Estimate of LCC Best Estimate of LCC Sensitivity Analysis Standard Factors

  11. LCC Applications • Customer: • Affordability studies - measure impact of a system’s LCC on the system budget • Source selection - compare LCC among competing systems (suppliers) • Design trade studies - influence design aspects of systems that impact LCC • Evaluate design alternatives • Evaluate support alternatives • Establish reliability and maintainability levels

  12. LCC Applications • Customer (continue): • Repair level analysis • Warranty pricing and cost effectiveness • Supplier • Identification of cost drivers for emphasis during program - sensitivity • Comparison of competing design and support approaches - ranking • Estimate of total LCC - tracking • Marketing tool - new and modified programs

  13. Life Cycle Costing in Sys. Acquisition 100 95% By end of full scale devlp. 85% By end of system def. 70% By end of concept studies Cumulative Percent of LCC 50 0 System Life Cycle SAE RM&S Workshop-April, 1989

  14. Determination of Mission Need Phase 0 Concept Exploration and Definition Phase I Demonstration and Validation Phase II Engineering and Manufacturing Development Phase III Production and Deployment Phase IV Operations and Support LCC by Program Phase • Conceptual • Studies • Investigation • of Alternative • Solutions • Identification/ • Analysis of • Major System • Alternatives • Competitive • Demonstration • Design and Test • Selected System • Alternative • Design Tradeoffs • Rate Production • of System • Warranty • User Support • Modifications/ • Product • Improvement

  15. Phased Lice Cycle Costs Acquisition Costs Ownership Costs Operational and Support Costs (O&S) Acquisition Costs Annual Cost Development Costs • Production Items • Support Items • Impact on • Force Structure Equipment/Personnel • Logistical Support Systems Concept D&V FSD Life Cycle Phases

  16. LCC Analysis • LCC Analysis Applications • Types of LCC Analyses • LCC Baseline Analysis • Operating and Support Costs • LCC Tradeoff Analysis

  17. LCC Analysis Applications • Marketing Effort: conducted to demonstrate the cost advantage of a proposed system compared with existing equipment or competitors equipment • Proposal Effort: Conducted per customer’s requirements and used as a customer evaluation tool

  18. LCC Analysis Applications • Required Contractual Effort: Conducted per customer’s requirements and used to evaluate different alternatives or to monitor LCC as design matures • General Program Support: conducted to assist internal management in deciding among alternative approaches to solving a problem or in evaluation the risk associated with particular decision

  19. Types of LCC Analyses • Baseline LCC Analysis: Evaluates the life cycle cost for a particular system configuration for a given operational and maintenance environment • Sensitivity Analysis: Determines the sensitivity of the output results ot key input parameters in order to identify ocst drivers which will require special controls and monitoring as well as improved model input accuracy

  20. Types of LCC Analyses • Tradeoff Analysis: Evaluates different alternative approaches and selects a preferred candidate based upon a decision criterion such as cost, performance, availability or a weighted combination of these factors

  21. Types of LCC Analyses • LCC Tracking: Monitors the life cycle cost of a system over an extended period of time, noting variances from an established baseline and from the previous estimate and relating these changes to hardware/software modifications, maintenance policy changes, scenario fluctuations or other factors

  22. LCC Baseline Analyses • Sensitivity Analysis: • Pinpoints hardware/software, cost categories, and input parameters with greatest impact on LCC - drivers • Establishes thresholds for the drivers • Reference point for subsequent LCC analysis • Frequent drivers - from experience • Unit Production Cost (UPC) - The average cost per unit for defined quantities

  23. LCC Baseline Analyses • Frequent drivers-from experience (cont.) • Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) - with operating hours, estimates the expected number of failures per unit in a defined time frame • Mean Time To Repair (MTTR) - with labor rate, estimates the active maintenance labor cost per failure - determined for each maintenance level

  24. Operating & Support Cost: 20 Year Distribution Operating & Support Cost Unscheduled Maintenance Cost Trans 5% Sch Maint 2% Uns Maint 15% Spares 3% 50% 40% 10% Parts Consumed Labor Repair Matl Fuel 75% Elements of Cost

  25. LCC Tradeoff Analysis • Identifies preferred design/support candidate from LCC standpoint • Provides ranking of candidates with respect to LCC - minimal emphasis on magnitude of LCC for each candidate (concentrate on difference(s)) • Through sensitivity analysis, identifies thresholds on input data drivers where ranking of candidates is changed

  26. LCC Tradeoff Analysis • Evaluates other tradeoff criteria, i.e., performance, operational readiness and mission reliability, and combines these with LCC for overall cost-effectiveness figure of merit

  27. LCC Tracking • Indicates trend of total system LCC every 6 months - compare with baseline estimate • Provides feedback to design and support engineers - status against assigned goals • Control of LCC drivers related to the hardware/software - must meet specs • Definition of tradeoffs to balance LCC drivers to control total LCC - triggered by increasing LCC over previous estimate

  28. LCC Tracking • Minimize importance of absolute magnitude of LCC estimate - trend is the key issue • Provides interval estimates for LCC prediction purposes - cost-risk analysis

  29. Life Cycle Cost Forecasting Margin of Error LCC LCC Uncertainty Time - Years SAE RM&S Workshop-April, 1989

  30. Relationship Between LCC and MTBF Total Life Cycle Cost Cost ($) Operating and Support Cost Development and Acquisition Cost MTBF (Hours)

  31. Conclusion • LCC can be controlled on government and commercial programs through the diligent application of sound LCC Analysis Process • DTLCC is a management tool to integrate LCC into the decision process • DTLCC is not well defined and depends on ingenuity to make it work • Tradeoffs are the cornerstones

  32. Conclusion • Team concept is the vehicle for a successful DTLCC program - communication and cooperation • Emphasis must be placed on the LCC drivers early in the design phase • Cost must be traded off against performance to satisfy the true intent of DTLCC • LCC Results must be related to the hardware/software to implement DTLCC

  33. Conclusion • Design and support people must “Think LCC” continually if DTLCC is to be successful • There must be a continual dialogue between customer and supplier for DTLCC to be successful - adequate time and funding

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